Sports
Zee to broadcast ILT20 Season 5 from November 22
34 match Gulf league runs till 20 December, streamed on Zee5.
MUMBAI: Cricket is packing its bags for a winter getaway and this time, the desert’s calling the shots. Zee Entertainment Enterprises Limited has locked in the live broadcast of Season 5 of the DP World International League T20, setting the stage for a month-long cricket spectacle from November 22 to December 20, 2026. The six-team tournament will feature 34 matches, culminating in the final at the Dubai International Stadium. The league, already positioned as the second-most watched T20 competition globally, continues its December window shift, a move introduced in Season 4 after its earlier January-February scheduling.
That shift appears to have paid off. Season 4 drew 397 million unique viewers across television and OTT platforms, marking a 7.49 per cent increase over Season 3. The final, held on January 4, 2026, played out to a packed stadium as the Desert Vipers clinched their maiden title with a 46-run win over the MI Emirates.
Zee will air the matches across its linear television network and stream them on Zee5, while also exploring distribution via its upcoming dedicated sports channels. The broadcaster is clearly betting big on cricket to deepen engagement and expand its sports footprint.
Season 4’s on-field fireworks were matched by star power. Sam Curran walked away as Player of the Tournament and Best Batter, while Waqar Salamkheil claimed Best Bowler honours, and Muhammad Waseem emerged as the Best UAE Player. The squads also featured global names such as Andre Russell, Kieron Pollard, Moeen Ali and Sunil Narine, reinforcing the league’s international appeal.
Beyond the boundary ropes, the league is also expanding its footprint. Partnerships with the Saudi Arabia Cricket Federation and Kuwait Cricket are expected to feed into development tournaments ahead of Season 5, signalling ambitions that stretch beyond just a broadcast window.
For Zee, the message is clear, as cricket chases newer geographies and audiences, the broadcaster is determined not just to air the game but to own a bigger slice of its growing global narrative.




